“T-illusion”
What to do
The vertical part of the ‘T’
(right) changes its length. Click on it, the movement will stop, and you can now
drag the size until you are satisfied that the vertical and horizontal parts are
identical in length. Instead of dragging, you can press ‘+’/‘–’ on your keyboard.
When you now press the “Show Result” button, the length in percent is displayed
and a rotated version of the horizontal bar overlays the vertical one.
The top left pop-up menu allows to test this for various rotations. Select a new
orientation, then click somewhere on the T, and adjust using
the ‘+’/‘–’ keys.
Does the strength of the illusion depend on orientation?
Comment
Most explanations don’t convince me particularly (but see the new reference below
{M&T 2013} for good background information in addition to nice experiments).
Sources
A
zero-gravity parabolic flight will test the T-illusion (more details)
Literature
Mikellidou
K, Thompson P (2013) The vertical-horizontal illusion: Assessing the contributions
of anisotropy, abutting, and crossing to the misperception of simple line stimuli.
JOV 13:8,7
Created: 2004-08-16
Last update: 2013-10-04